It wouldn’t be wise to go head to head with a helmeted hornbill. They weigh 3kg and have their own built-in battering ram – a solid lump of keratin (a fibrous protein) extends along the top of the bill and on to the skull. This “casque” can account for as much as 11% of a bird’s weight.
In all other species of hornbill – there are more than 60 in Africa and Asia – the casque is hollow, but the helmeted hornbill’s is solid. The males use it in head-to-head combat and both sexes use it as a weighted tool to dig out insects from rotting trees.
Helmeted hornbills live in islands. They tend to eat fruit and nuts.
They have a wingspan of up to 2m (6ft 6in), striking white and black feathers and a large patch of bare skin around the throat.
Source: BBC
N.KH